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Buy-back clause for Juventus until 2019–20 season 27 July 2018: DF: Giangiacomo Magnani: 22 Sassuolo: €5M Paid in three instalments and €12M Buy-back clause for Juventus until 2019–20 season 28 July 2018: DF: Dario Del Fabro: 23 Cremonese: N/A On loan until June 2019 30 July 2018: DF: Luca Barlocco: 23 Piacenza: N/A On loan until June 2019
Opted to sign permanently and €22.5M Buy-back clause for Juventus [66] [67] 1 July 2019: DF: Rogério: 21 Sassuolo: €6M Signed permanently by option to buy [68] 1 July 2019: DF: Matteo Pinelli: 18 Sassuolo: €1.8M Signed permanently [68] 1 July 2019: DF: Luca Barlocco: 24 L.R. Vicenza Virtus: Free Contract expiration [69] 1 July 2019: MF ...
Juventus achieved its greatest successes with the tennis section. [272] In the late 1960s, a skiing section named Sporting Club Juventus was established, based in Castagneto Po and active throughout the following decade. [273] [274] In the 2017–2018 season, Juventus established a women's football section with a team in the Serie A women's ...
Juventus, Italy's most powerful soccer club, will be forced to forfeit 15 Serie A points after an Italian court essentially found that it had rigged finances related to transfer deals.
On 10 January 2021, in a Serie A game against Sassuolo, Danilo opened the scoring with a 25-meter goal; Juventus won 3–1. [34] Following the departure of Leonardo Bonucci, Danilo was appointed Juventus's captain for the 2023–24 season, [35] becoming the club's first non-Italian captain since Omar Sívori in 1965. [36]
A transfer may also include a buy-back clause, whereby the selling club attaches an exercisable option to buy-back the player at a predetermined financial amount (which is usually higher than the initial purchase price of the buying club), at a predetermined later date (usually two years after the completed sale). [242]
The history of Juventus F.C. covers over 120 years of association football from the club based in Turin, Italy, and established in 1897 that would eventually become the most successful team in the history of Italian football and amongst the elite football clubs of the world. [1] Iuventūs is Latin for "youth". [2]
Calciopoli (Italian: [kalˈtʃɔːpoli]) was a sports scandal in Italy's top professional association football league Serie A and to a lesser extent Serie B. [nb 1] Involving various clubs and numerous executives, both from the same clubs and from the main Italian football bodies (Italian Referee Association (AIA) [it; es], FIGC, and LNP), as well as some referees and referee assistants, the ...